MD5: 59bab8f71f8c096cd3f72cd73851515d
Rename it to: Sublime Text
Make it executable with: chmod u+x Sublime\ Text
import threading | |
import time | |
class ThreadingExample(object): | |
""" Threading example class | |
The run() method will be started and it will run in the background | |
until the application exits. | |
""" |
#!/usr/bin/env python | |
# Multi-threading template | |
import argparse, subprocess, signal, Queue | |
from threading import Thread, Lock | |
from sys import stdout | |
from os import getpid, kill | |
class myThread (Thread): | |
def __init__(self, threadID, name, q): |
{ | |
"name": "SyncExtension", | |
"version": "0.1", | |
"manifest_version": 2, | |
"description": "Storage Sync Extension", | |
"permissions": [ "storage" ], | |
"browser_action": { |
Single Page Apps are ruling the world and AngularJS is leading the charge. But many of the lessons we learned in the Web 2.0 era no longer apply, and few are as drastically different as authentication.
CORS is an oft-misunderstood feature of new browsers that is configured by a remote server. CORS stands for Cross-Origin-Resource-Sharing, and was designed to make it possible to access services outside of the current origin (or domain) of the current page.
Like many browser features, CORS works because we all agree that it works. So all major browsers like Chrome, Firefox, and IE support and enforce it. By using these browsers, you benefit from the security of CORS.
That means certain browsers do not enforce it, so it is not relevant there. One large example is a native Web View for things like Cordova and Phonegap. However, these tools often have configuration options for whitelisting domains so you can add some security that way.
from selenium import webdriver | |
driver = webdriver.Firefox() | |
driver.get('https://www.facebook.com/') | |
with open('jquery-1.9.1.min.js', 'r') as jquery_js: | |
jquery = jquery_js.read() #read the jquery from a file | |
driver.execute_script(jquery) #active the jquery lib | |
driver.execute_script("$('#email').text('anhld')") |
# Hello, and welcome to makefile basics. | |
# | |
# You will learn why `make` is so great, and why, despite its "weird" syntax, | |
# it is actually a highly expressive, efficient, and powerful way to build | |
# programs. | |
# | |
# Once you're done here, go to | |
# http://www.gnu.org/software/make/manual/make.html | |
# to learn SOOOO much more. |
#Unix Toolbox
##Unix Toolbox revision 14.4
# 2048.py | |
# Written in python / pygame by DavidSousaRJ - [email protected] | |
# License: Creative Commons | |
# Sorry about some comments in portuguese! | |
import os | |
import sys | |
import pygame | |
from pygame.locals import * | |
from random import randint |